JULY 1991
#1s
RUSH RUSH –•– Paula Abdul (5 weeks from June)
UNBELIEVABLE –•– E.M.F. (1 week)
(EVERYTHING I DO) I DO IT FOR YOU –•– Bryan Adams (7 weeks through to September)
"Rush Rush" had barely been removed from #1 when
Paula Abdul's label released "Promise Of A New Day" with a high new entry at #40 (see below).
EMF having a US #1 is still to this day a head scratcher, but I suppose it's gimmicky enough to cross over and it does have pop-punk elements to it, so can perhaps see the appeal. If that wasn't enough
Jesus Jones peaked at #2 with "Right Here Right Now" and it really was a case of, Hey US, thanks for embracing the UK alternative scene, but these were the bands you chose...?
So yeah
Bryan Adams was as big here as it was everywhere else - maybe not as big as the 14 weeks it took to destroy the summer of 1991 in the UK, but 7 weeks is a LONG time to be #1 in the US in 1991. Songs that this track held off #1:
RIGHT HERE, RIGHT NOW –•– Jesus Jones
P.A.S.S.I.O.N. –•– Rhythm Syndicate
EVERY HEARTBEAT –•– Amy Grant
IT AIN’T OVER TIL IT’S OVER –•– Lenny Kravitz
FADING LIKE A FLOWER (EVERY TIME YOU LEAVE) –•– Roxette
Happier times in the UK with songs not trying to sell more records than Bryan Adams, includes this mid-tempo dance track that is literally in my humble opinion one of the greatest songs ever made:
I'm offering the YouTube version because for whatever reason (maybe a dodgy sample) the original version is slowly being erased from existence, with the even the artist themselves adding a slightly re-produced version to their YouTube and Spotify channels. Don't rewrite history! This went to #16 in the UK but was a huge club classic all through the 90s.
Driza Bone remixed and produced for a lot of other artists, but I just learnt on Wiki that his most successful work was Shanice's "I Love Your Smile" - it was his remix that became the official single.
UK Soul really was doing well at the time and was a wonderful accompaniament to the house scene. With
Brand New Heavies,
Incognito,
Innocence,
Driza Bone all emerging and others coming soon, but over in the US there were similar acts too. This is a song that has stood the test of time:
This went to #28 in the UK after a re-release. It didn't chart in the Billboard 100, but was actually a #3 US R&B hit.
This gorgeous trip-hop song gave
Bomb The Bass another hit in 1991:
From their second album
Unknown Territory, which is not on Spotify for some reason. They were never able to recapture their success from the 1988 album that emerged at the origins of UK house music, but this aptly named track was an outlier that reached #7.
I'll have to put this month's dance tracks in a separate post or I won't be able to submit this post. Too many great songs, not enough data.
Discoveries:
Yasmin is someone I have no idea about, releasing this lovely bop which actually sounds more like a late 90s pop song, perhaps ahead of its time?
I've had a quick flick through the parent album
Slow and it's actually really good. Not sure if anyone knows anything about her? I was amused reading the Spotify bio hoping to learn more about her, getting VERY confused until I realised that she has been mis-labelled as the UK pop-soul singer from Manchester who came out about 2014. Spotify really need to do something about how they label artists with the same name. I've had some VERY odd songs recommended to me on my radar over the years.
Notable new entries (US):
July 6
65 — TOO MANY WALLS –•– Cathy Dennis
73 — THE MOTOWN SONG –•– Rod Stewart
99 — GOT A LOVE FOR YOU –•– Jomanda
July 13
59 — TIME, LOVE AND TENDERNESS –•– Michael Bolton
64 — YOU COULD BE MINE –•– Guns N’ Roses
68 — UNFORGETTABLE –•– Natalie Cole & Nat King Cole
97 — MY FALLEN ANGEL –•– Coro
July 20
40 — THE PROMISE OF A NEW DAY –•– Paula Abdul
49 — THINGS THAT MAKE YOU GO HMMM… –•– C&C Music Factory
80 — IT HIT ME LIKE A HAMMER –•– Huey Lewis & The News
82 — GOOD VIBRATIONS –•– Marky Mark & The Funky Bunch
83 — SOMETHING TO TALK ABOUT –•– Bonnie Raitt
94 — THERE SHE GOES –•– The La’s
98 — GOTTA HAVE YOU –•– Stevie Wonder
99 — WANNA DANCE –•– Yasmin
July 7
60 — I ADORE MI AMOR –•– Color Me Badd
67 — MY NAME IS NOT SUSAN –•– Whitney Houston
71 — SHINY HAPPY PEOPLE –•– R.E.M.
Cathy Dennis releases the 4th single from
Move To This and while she was starting to stall in the UK (#17) she was still going gangbusters in the US - this would peak at #8 and gave her a #1 on adult radio.
Rod Stewart continues his surprising run of success with another Top 10 single, a collaboration with
The Temptations. He would continue to chart until 1998!
Jomanda was someone I just thought was a diva like
Adeva or
Alison Limerick - I didn't realise it was an actual R&b/house girl group! They were pretty much just a dance act in the UK - this track went to #43 and then they had a huge hit in 1992 thanks to
Felix remixing their previous album's minor hit "Dont You Want Me". Before that though, this lovely slice of American vocal house went to #40 in the US, but in Europe the
Steve Hurley mix was better known.
Apparently they also had a second album in 1993 with some minor hits - I really should investigate further.
So yeah I really love this song, moopy shame be damned:
Even though
Michael Bolton fancied himself as a soul singer, he never really had me convinced (covering REALLY famous classic soul songs didn't help) but he actually sounds alright when he sticks to
Steve Winwood-style pop-rock songs like this.
That
Coro song is another freestyle banger that some on here might like or remember... not really my bag, again.
I love that
C&C Music Factory song - another early vinyl purchase of mine. It was huge in the UK because it had also been the theme tune to a late night show - I forgot which one, someone will be able to remind me. This was their second Top 5 hit in the UK, and third in the US (and their last in both).
And speaking of hip-house music, after "Gonna Make You Sweat" this is probably the best song of the genre:
This should NOT work on any level - was anyone really wanting
Donnie Wahlberg's younger brother to come along as a white rapper using a
Loleatta Holloway sample? It might be nostalgia but I still love this now - it's so unapologetically 1991: the piano, the tambourine house beat, the soaring gospel vocals... and yes I had this single vinyl too. This surprisingly only went to #14 in the UK - it felt a lot bigger if you were into the dance scene at the time. It did however hit #1 in the US and was a global hit around the world. Do yourself a favour and don't bother with the album though. I had a listen on Spotify and it's SHOCKING
This month's surprising US hit:
The La's 
a Liverpool britpop group. Although we'd already seen
The Stone Roses and
James, and the Madchester scene was in full swing, and
Blur were already kicking about in the background ready to make a go of it, The La's probably don't get enough credit for being a big influence on what was about to come. Member John Powers left and formed
Cast, who lasted longer, but the La's felt like the real deal... for about 5 minutes. Wiki reminds me that the song is originally from 1998, but it didn't catch on until around this time. Seemingly, way ahead of their time. Them splitting as they broke through feels premature, but they'd actually been together for almost a decade by this point. Someone like
@octophone might know more about it than me.
"Shiny Happy People" coming off the heels of "Losing My Religion" is a reminder to me of how big
Out Of Time must have been at the time... their biggest era always felt like the upcoming
Automatic For The People album, but this album had two US Top 10s (again, shocking that "Losing My Religion" only went to #19 in the UK, but they were only just breaking through at that point).
REM would continue to have hits throughout the 90s, but with diminishing returns in the US, even from the next album onwards. But they continued to be prolific in the UK up to the mid 00s.